Author: Mrs. Anjum Shahnawaz

  • Committee to review tax structure for stock market

    Committee to review tax structure for stock market

    ISLAMABAD: Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on Friday set up a consultative committee to review tax structure for stock market.

    The FBR constituted the consultative committee on capital markets tax reforms, which comprising following members:

    Member Inland Revenue Policy, FBR as chairman

    Shauzab Ali, Commissioner Securities Market Division, SECP as Member

    Farrukh H. Khan, Chief Executive Officer, PSX as Member

    Ahmed Ali Mitha, Chief Financial Officer, PSX as Member

    Chief (Income Tax Policy), FBR as Secretary.

    According to the terms of reference for the committee, it shall act as a forum till budget making exercise for the year 2021/2022, to review tax policies and suggest specific short-term and medium to long term measures for the development of debt and equity market, commodity futures, mutual funds, REITs, corporate and insurance sector, amongst others.

    Broadly it will review and recommend all measures that impinge upon the capital markets and its stakeholders.

    The committee may invite proposals from relevant stakeholders, deliberate and finalize tax reforms in the aforementioned areas.

    The proposals shall be categorized into immediate, medium term and long-term reforms and shall accordingly be prioritized.

    First report of the committee shall be submitted to the FBR within 20 days of its constitution.

    The FBR said that necessary amendments to the tax laws shall be initiated in consultation with the committee for implementation of the agreed proposals.

  • FMU prepares red flags for real estate agents to report suspicious transactions

    FMU prepares red flags for real estate agents to report suspicious transactions

    KARACHI: Financial Monitoring Unit (FMU) has prepared red flags indicators for real estate agents to report suspicious transactions related sales and purchase of immovable properties for prevent money laundering and terror financing.

    According to the FMU, Under Section 7(1) of Anti-Money Laundering (AML) Act 2010 which states that reporting entities including Real Estate Agents, property dealers / brokers, housing authorities, and builders and developers are required to promptly report Suspicious Transaction Report (STR) for transaction conducted or attempted, at their counter or through such real estate agents/developers, if it knows, suspects or has reason to suspect that the transaction or a pattern of transactions of which the transaction:

    (a) involves funds derived from illegal activities or is intended or conducted in order to hide or disguise proceeds of crime.

    (b) is designed to evade any requirements of this section

    (c) has no apparent lawful purpose after examining the available facts, including the background and possible purpose of the transaction; or

    (d) involves financing of terrorism, including fund collected, provided, used or meant for, or otherwise linked or related to, terrorism, terrorist acts or organizations and individuals concerned with terrorism.

    In order to identify a suspicion that could be indicative of Money Laundering (ML) or Terrorism Financing (TF), FMU has prepared the red flags indicators that are specially intended as an aid for the real estate sector.

    These red flags may appear suspicious on their own; however, it may be considered that a single red flag would not be a clear indicator of potential ML / TF activity.

    However, a combination of these red flags, in addition to analysis of overall financial activity and client profile may indicate a potential ML / TF activity.

    Red Flags for Purchaser/Seller Behavior:

    —  Purchaser/Seller’s economic profile does not align with the cost of the property.

    —  Source of funds cannot be identified or is unclear.

    —  Client or transaction is from country or jurisdiction in relation to which the FATF has called for countermeasures or enhanced client due diligence measures or jurisdiction known to have inadequate measures to prevent money laundering and the financing of terrorism.

    —  The client or any of its associated person / entity found positive match while screening against UN Security Council Resolutions (UNSCRs).

    —  Purchaser / Seller is linked to negative news or named in a news report on a crime committed or under Law Enforcement investigation/inquiry).

    —  The use of intermediaries who are not subject to adequate AML/CFT laws and measures and who are not adequately supervised.

    —  Client insists on using an intermediary (either professional or informal) in all interactions during transactions without sufficient justification.

    —  Clients who appear to be acting on somebody else’s instructions without disclosing the identity of such person.

    —  Unexplained delegation of authority by the client by using powers of attorney.

    —  Purchaser/Seller appears to be acting as proxies for the purchase of the properties and makes attempts to conceal the identity of the beneficial owner.

    —  Purchaser buys property in the name of a nominee such as an associate or a relative (other than a spouse or child), or on behalf of minors or other persons who lack the economic capacity to carry out such purchases or on behalf of Politically exposed person (PEP).

    —  Political exposed client who is linked to negative news / crime or any client who is family member or close associate of such political exposed person.

    —  Purchaser/Seller provides an address that is unknown, believed to be false, or simply a correspondence address, e.g. a post office box number which might not provide details of the actual address.

    —  Purchaser/Seller is suspected to be using forged, fraudulent or false identity documents for due diligence and record keeping purposes.

    —  Significant and unexplained geographic distance between the agent and the purchaser/seller during the sale.

    —  Purchaser/ Seller appears unconcerned about the economic or investment value of the property he/she is purchasing /selling or associated commissions and fees.

    —  Purchaser buys property without making any attempt to inspect or review the brochure or marketing material of the property.

    —  Purchaser/seller respectively buys/sells multiple properties in a short time period and seems to have less concerns about the location and price of each property.

    —  Purchaser/seller seems very keen about AML/CFT reporting threshold requirements.

    —  Purchaser/seller is a shell company or trust and representatives of the company refuse to disclose the identity of the beneficial owners.

    —  Purchaser’s known business activity and purpose do not match the real estate transaction, e.g. purchaser is a non-profit organisation but the property is purchased for investment which requires a large loan.

    —  Purchaser/Seller appears hesitant or declines to put his name on any documents that would connect him with the property.

    —  Purchaser/Seller appears to be using business funds for personal use, or vice versa.

    —  Recording the sale of a vacant land and the sale of a newly completed in building in less time than construction would normally take.

    Red Flags for Transactional Patterns:

    —  Payments from purchaser are financed by an unusual source, e.g. from an offshore bank located in a jurisdiction identified as high-risk and non-cooperative by FATF.

    —  Transaction, whether property is sold directly by a developer or sold in a sub-sale by a purchaser, is entered into at a value significantly different (much higher or much lower) from the real or market value of the property.

    —  Purchaser pays the initial deposit with a cheque from a third party, other than a spouse or parent.

    —  Payment for purchase was done through multiple cash transactions and paid direct to the project account or Seller insisted to get the huge payments in cash only.

    —  Speed of the transaction (transactions that are unduly expedited without a reasonable explanation may be higher risk).

    —  Use of complex loans, or other obscure means of finance, versus loans from regulated financial institutions.

  • PM inaugurates special technology zone authority

    PM inaugurates special technology zone authority

    ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Imran Khan on Friday said special technology zone authority will serve to create a space for foreign investors.

    At the launching ceremony of Special Technology Zone Authority (STZA), the prime minister said that the authority would serve to create a space for foreign investors, indigeneous companies and educational and training institutes to collaborate for Information Technology driven industrial revolution in Pakistan.

    Amer Ahmed Hashmi has been appointed the Chairman of the Authority who on the occasion lauded the Prime Minister for taking personal interest in prioritization of STZA’s establishment.

    The launch marks the beginning of an era of dedicated and integrated national knowledge-based ecosystem in Pakistan.

    The specific mandate of STZA is to lead the development of Special Technology Zones (STZs) in the country. The zones will help increase high-tech exports of Pakistan and facilitate technology transfer from major global Science and Technology hubs.

    Chairman STZA said that the zones will foster skills development, job creation, technology transfer and new economic value generation.

    Industrial clusters formation has not only led to rapid industrialization and social development of countries like China, Japan, and South Korea, but have become the global best practice for high-speed growth and development.

    The Prime Minister said that collaborative efforts and correct course of comprehensive national development through these STZs will lead to the utilization of the immense potential of the youth of Pakistan.

  • Customs officials promoted to post of principal appraisers

    Customs officials promoted to post of principal appraisers

    ISLAMABAD: Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on Friday notified promotions of appraising officers and assistant private secretary of Pakistan Customs Department to the post of principal appraisers (BS-16) with immediate effect until further orders.

    FBR notified promotions of following officers:

    01. Khalid Hassan Awan posted at Directorate General Transit Trade, Karachi.

    02. Salman Ahmed posted at Model Customs Collectorate (MCC) Appraisement and Facilitation (East) Karachi.

    03. Aijaz Ahmed Butt posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation (East), Karachi.

    04. Rana Insaram Rabbani posted at MCC Export, Customs House, Karachi.

    05. Ejaz Ahmed posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation (East), Karachi.

    06. Muhammad Khalid posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation (West), Karachi.

    07. Nasir Ahmed posted at MCC Export, Customs House, Karachi.

    08. Mirza Irfan Baig posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation (East) Karachi.

    09. Zaka ullah posted at MCC Export, Customs House, Karachi

    10. Muhammad Zaman Khan Tarar posted at MCC Allama Iqbal International Airport, Lahore.

    11. Muhammad Ashfaq Ghouri posted at Post Clearance Audit (Central), Lahore.

    12. Arshad Nazir posted at Post Clearance Audit (Central), Lahore.

    13. Sarfraz Ahmad posted at MCC Islamabad.

    14. Faiz Muhammad Awan posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation, Lahore.

    15. Syed Muhammad Jaffar posted at Post Clearance Audit (Central) Lahore.

    16. Shahzad Malik posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation, Lahore.

    17. Dost Mohammad posted at Directorate General of Intelligence and Investigation, Customs, Karachi.

    18. Naveed Iqbal Cheema posted at MCC Enforcement and Compliance, Lahore.

    19. Muhammad Qadeer Khan posted at MCC Export Karachi.

    20. Ijaz Ahmed Siddiqui posted at Post Clearance Audit (Central) Lahore.

    21. Khurram Rafique posted at MCC Appraisement and Facilitation (East) Karachi.

    22. Zia Hassan posted at MCC Islamabad.

    23. Miraj Muhammad posted as Assistant Private Secretary, MCC Exports, Karachi.

    The FBR said that the promotions of the officers would take effect from the date of their joining, subject to the condition that no disciplinary proceedings/inquiry was pending against them.

    The promoted officers will be on probation for a period of one year, extendable for further period, not exceeding one year, provided that if no order is issued by the day following the termination of probationary period, the appointment shall deem to be held until further order.

    The officers already drawing performance allowance equal to 100 percent of basic pay will continue to draw it on their promotion.

  • Stock market gains 310 points on improved economic indicators

    Stock market gains 310 points on improved economic indicators

    KARACHI: The stock market gained 310 points on Friday owing to improvement in economic indicators, especially in monthly exports growth that is the highest since September 2013.

    The benchmark KSE-100 index of Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX) closed at 45,654 points as against previous day’s closing of 45,344 points, showing an increase of 310 points.

    Analysts at Arif Habib Limited said that improvement in leading macro indicators such as growth in exports (highest monthly number since Sep 2013) as well as consistent increase in SBP forex reserves had the investors maintain an upbeat sentiment, especially on the banking sector stocks, which were relatively laggard in the previous Bull Run.

    Banking sector stocks contributed the most to the Index in terms of points, however, selling pressure was observed in O&GMCs (among which, PSO saw the most attrition in the MoC).

    Among textile, ILP performed well on the back of announcement of textile policy in the coming week. Scrips that led the volumes include BYCO (163.4 million shares), followed by HUMNL (44.8 million) and PRL (37.9 million).

    Sectors contributing to the performance include Banks (+160 points), Engineering (+25 points), E&P (+21 points), Textile (+21 points) and Fertilizer (+21 points).

    Volumes increased from 641.4 million shares to 696.4 million shares (+8 percent DoD). Average traded value however declined by 15 percent to reach US$ 135.1 million as against US$ 159.5 million.

    Stocks that contributed significantly to the volumes include BYCO, HUMNL, PRL, KEL and LOTCHEM, which formed 45 percent of total volumes.

    Stocks that contributed positively to the index include UBL (+49 points), MCB (+38 points), OGDC (+26 points), BAHL (+25 points) and HBL (+21 points). Stocks that contributed negatively include FFC (-17 points), PSO (-15 points), MARI (-11 points), KOHC (-6 points) and UNITY (-5 points).

  • Remittances grow by 25 percent; half year highest in 14 years

    Remittances grow by 25 percent; half year highest in 14 years

    KARACHI: The inflows of workers remittances have registered 25 percent growth during first half of the current fiscal year. This is the highest half yearly growth since FY07, the State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) said on Friday.

    On a cumulative basis, workers’ remittances reached an unprecedented level of $14.2 billion during the first half of FY21, 25 percent higher than the same period last year.

    Workers’ remittances maintained their strong momentum for the seventh consecutive month in December.  Remittances rose further to $2.4 billion, growing by 16.2 percent on a year-on-year basis and 4.2 percent on a month-on-month basis.

    Remittance inflows have been well-diversified. Most of the inflows during H1-FY21 were sourced from Saudi Arabia ($4.0 billion), United Arab Emirates ($3.0 billion), United Kingdom ($1.9 billion) and United States ($1.2 billion).

    This strong growth in workers’ remittances is attributable to the increased use of formal channels on the back of sustained efforts by the government and SBP to encourage inflows through official channels as well as limited cross-border travel due to the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, together with favorable foreign exchange market dynamics.

  • Rupee depreciates by 16 paisas on import, corporate payment demand

    Rupee depreciates by 16 paisas on import, corporate payment demand

    KARACHI: The Pak Rupee fell by 16 paisas against the dollar on Friday owing to demand for import and corporate payments ahead of weekly holidays.

    The rupee ended Rs160.17 to the dollar from previous day’s closing of Rs160.01 in the interbank foreign exchange market.

    Currency dealers said that the demand for the dollar was remained higher during the day due to two weekly holidays ahead.

    The dealers said that the market also witnessed inflows for export receipts and workers’ remittances during the day but those were not sufficient to meet the demand.

    The dealers hoped that the inflows export receipts and workers’ remittances would help the rupee to make gain.

    On January 02, 2021, Adviser to the Prime Minister on Commerce and Investment, Abdul Razaq Dawood has expressed his satisfaction that the exports in December 2020 have increased by 18.3 percent to $ 2,357 million as compared to $ 1,993 million in December 2019, showing an increase of $364 million.

    The Adviser said this was the highest export ever in the previous month of December 2020.

    He said that the export figures showed the resilience of the economy of Pakistan and was a vindication of the government’s policy to keep the wheels of economy running during COVID-19 pandemic. The 6-months’ performance of exports was also discussed in the meeting.

  • FBR constitutes committee for tax return form simplification

    FBR constitutes committee for tax return form simplification

    ISLAMABAD: Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on Friday constituted a committee for simplification of income tax return for Tax Year 2021.

    As a part of various reform initiatives and in pursuance to the special instructions of the Prime Minister of Pakistan, FBR chairman has constituted a committee for timely designing/finalization and simplification of Income Tax Return forms for individuals, AOPs and companies for tax Year 2021.

    While departing from the previous practice, the FBR aims at designing the return forms in much advance so that forms are available to the taxpayers on the very first day of the tax year.

    The committee shall be chaired by Member (IR-Policy) whereas Chief Information Officer, Chiefs of Inland Revenue Operations & Inland Revenue Policy and Second Secretary, Domain Business Team (DBT) of FBR’s Information Technology Wing would be members of the committee.

    The committee aims at simplifying the income tax return forms to the best possible extent besides developing the return forms that require least possible interventions on year to year basis. International best practices shall be a guiding principle for the committee.

    The idea behind this endeavor is to facilitate the taxpayers’ and make the income tax return form more user-friendly and free from unnecessary complications.

    In order to make this initiative more fruit bearing and result oriented, FBR through a separate communication has requested the ICAP, ICMAP, Pakistan Tax Bar Associations and various Chambers of Commerce and Industry to give their input for designing a simplified version of the returns.

  • SBP warns public against dealing with illegal forex operators

    SBP warns public against dealing with illegal forex operators

    KARACHI: State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) has warned general public against sale and purchase through illegal operators and transfer of foreign currency through Hawala and Hundi.

    The SBP informed the general public that a person may unknowingly become part of money laundering and terrorism financing offence by dealing with illegal foreign exchange operators.

    The money laundering and terrorism financing offences are punishable under Anti Money Laundering (AML) Act 2010 and Anti Terrorism Act (ATA), 1997.

    “It is advised in your self-interest to carry foreign currency sale, purchase and remittance transaction with only SBP authorized banks and exchange companies.”

    The SBP also advised that do not forget to collect system generated official receipt of transactions. If a person come across any illegal foreign exchange sale/purchase and Hawala/Hundi Operators should report the Federal Investigation Agency.

    The SBP said that the business of foreign exchange in Pakistan is regulated under Foreign Exchange Regulation Act 9FERA) 1947.

    State Bank of Pakistan issues authorization to banks and exchange companies to conduct foreign exchange business. Any person (individual or entity) other than those authorized by the SBP are doing illegal foreign exchange business which is punishable offence under FERA 1947 and AMLA 2010.

    All such operators are informed in their own interest not to indulge in illegal foreign exchange sale/purchase and hawala/hundi business.

    “Extensive action against illegal currency exchange and hawala/hundi operators is being carried out by relevant law enforcement agencies,” the SBP said.

  • Customs to confiscate properties acquired through proceeds of smuggling

    Customs to confiscate properties acquired through proceeds of smuggling

    ISLAMABAD: Customs authorities have been empowered to confiscate properties that are acquired through proceeds of smuggling.

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